1. 1
NCDHHS COVID-19 Response:
K-12 School Reopening Updates
November 5, 2020
Dr. Elizabeth Cuervo Tilson, State Health
Director & Chief Medical Officer
Susan Gale Perry, Chief Deputy Secretary
Rebecca Planchard, Senior Policy Advisor
North Carolina State Board of Education
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2. 22
Where Are We? Key Metrics
Percent of Tests That Are Positive
Percent of ED Visits This Season That Are For COVID-Like
Illness Compared to Previous Seasons
COVID-19 Cases by Date Reported
Current COVID-19 Hospitalizations
North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services | November 5, 2020
3. 3
• Also seeing spread in:
− Smaller Social Gatherings
− Houses of Worship
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Cases are increasing in rural counties more
quickly than in urban or suburban counties.
**Early Data
0
1000
2000
3000
4000
5000
6000
7000
8000
COVID-19 Cases in Rural Communities by Age
0-17 18-24 25-49 50-64 65+
North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services | November 5, 2020
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• Children can get and spread COVID-19
• Children, in general have mild illness or no symptoms
• Children, especially younger children, may be less likely
to have, and spread COVID-19 than adults
• So far in NC, US, or internationally – not seeing schools
as a big source of spread
https://files.nc.gov/covid/documents/guidance/education/What-Are-We-Learning-About-Children-and-COVID-English.pdf
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What are we learning about COVID-19 cases
among children, adults and K-12 schools?
North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services | November 5, 2020
5. 55
**Early Data
NC COVID-19 Cases per 100,000
by Age Group & Report Week
0.0
50.0
100.0
150.0
200.0
250.0
300.0
350.0
400.0
Casesper100,000pop
0-17 18-24 25-49 50-64 65+
North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services | November 5, 2020
6. 6
New Lab-Confirmed Cases by Age Group:
Weekly Totals
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*Most Schools Reopened (8/17)
**Early Data
North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services | November 5, 2020
7. 7
Youth and Young Adult COVID-19 Cases
Per 100,000 Pop. By Ethnicity, Ages 0-17
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**Early Data
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
160
180
200
Casesper100,000pop
Hispanic Non Hispanic
See more: Race, Ethnicity, Age, Gender Data on Dashboard
North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services | November 5, 2020
8. 88
K-12 Reported Clusters
• 390 total cluster-associated cases among all
K-12 clusters (active and complete)
o 0 K-12 cluster-linked deaths
• 297 cases associated with currently active
clusters as of 11/03/20
o 34 currently active clusters
o 182 among students and 115 among staff
North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services | November 5, 2020
9. 99
Comparing Education Clusters
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
03/15 03/29 04/17 04/26 05/10 05/24 06/07 06/21 07/05 07/19 08/02 08/16 08/30 09/13 09/27 10/11 10/25
NumberofCases
Date of Illness Identification
Child Care, Schools, & Higher Education
Child Care Camp K-12 School College or University
North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services | November 5, 2020
10. 10
• Governor Cooper first announced Plan B as schools’
baseline operational plan
− Schools could choose more restrictive Plan C: remote-only
• As of 10/5, Plan A allowed for K – 5 (elementary grades)
• Remote instruction options must be provided for high-
risk individuals
• AAP, NAS Alignment: Schools are fundamentally
important to children’s well-being; need to be flexible
and balance risks/benefits.
Plan A for K – 5 only, Plan B allowed for all
10North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services | November 5, 2020
11. 1111
What Resources Are Available
For K – 12 Schools?
North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services | November 5, 2020
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• “In short, success in preventing the introduction and
subsequent transmission of SARS-CoV-2 in schools is
connected to and dependent upon preventing
transmission on communities.”
• The three core indicators are:
• New cases per 100k over the last 14 days in the county
• Percent positive over the past 14 days in the county
• Ability of the school district to implement 5 key mitigation strategies
− These are supplemented by additional indicators
• CDC indicators confirm NC’s statewide approach for making
decisions on school operations:
− Emphasize robust mitigation strategies, and
− Monitor community spread
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CDC Indicators for Dynamic School Decision-
Making
Source: https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/community/schools-childcare/indicators.html#thresholds
North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services | November 5, 2020
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Whatever Your Reason, Get Behind the Mask
ncdhhs.gov/WhateverYourReason and ncdhhs.gov/CualEsTuRazon
North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services | November 5, 2020
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• Risk of infection if exposed to someone with COVID-19
decreased by:
• 85% with social distancing
• 77% by always wearing a mask
• 76% by duration of contact <15 minutes
• 67% by frequent handwashing
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Prevention Lasagna…..It’s all about the layers
Doung-ngern et al. Case-control study of use of personal protective measures and risk for SARS-CoV-2 infection, Thailand. Emerg Infect Dis (2020).
North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services | November 5, 2020
20. 20
• Protect against the flu, COVID-19, and other
viruses
Practice the 3 Ws
Prevention Beyond COVID-19
20North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services | November 5, 2020
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What Other Tools And Updates Are Available
For K – 12 Schools?
North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services | November 5, 2020
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• Going live today
• Clarification of allowing an “alternate diagnosis”
• Easier to understand example symptom
screening questionnaire
• Easier to understand return list for excluded
individuals
− Clarifies when someone can come back to school who
had screened out due to symptoms, diagnosis, or
exposure
https://covid19.ncdhhs.gov/guidance#schools
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StrongSchoolsNC
Public Health Toolkit (K-12)
November Updates
North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services | November 5, 2020
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• Free smart phone app to support public health
• Notifies users if they have been exposed to
someone diagnosed with COVID-19
• App integrates with NC’s testing and tracing
infrastructure to provide next steps to notified
users
• Anonymous, no personal information stored
• Could be a helpful tool for school staff, older
students, and parents/families
• Download for free through the Apple App
Store and the Google Play Store
• Communications toolkit to help spread the
word:
https://covid19.ncdhhs.gov/slowcovidnc/communications-toolkit
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Slow COVID NC App
North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services | November 5, 2020
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• Influenza Vaccine – More
important than ever this year
• Required child and adolescent
vaccines
− Extended deadline for documentation
until December 30th.
− Need concerted effort to ensure
children and adolescents (especially
12th graders) are vaccinated
• On the horizon: COVID-19 vaccine
Vaccines
24North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services | November 5, 2020
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• See regularly updated FAQ document
• For questions about NCDHHS statewide
guidance not covered in the FAQ document,
email StrongSchoolsNC@dhhs.nc.gov
Questions?
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